Maybe of interest to some on GEP-ed.

Best, Klaus


--

Call for Papers: for our Mini-Conference SASE 2017 within the annual conference 
of the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics (SASE) 29 June - 1 July 
2017, Lyon, France, https://sase.org/event/2017-lyon/#mini

Mini-Conference Title: Transnational Governance of Global Production in a New 
Era of Information Sharing: Prospects and Challenges for Labor, Business, and 
the Environment.

Organizers:
Nicole Helmerich, Hertie School of Governance, 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Sigrid Quack, University Duisburg-Essen, 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Gale Raj-Reichert, University of Manchester, 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Sabrina Zajak, Ruhr-University Bochum, 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

    In the present changing global economy, modes of business, work and working 
conditions are being increasingly shaped by advances in communication, data, 
and knowledge sharing through information technology. Global firms are 
restructuring their production with the help of sophisticated software which 
for example makes it easier to track the management of vast global value 
chains. Also, workers in factories have created communication platforms to 
share information over working conditions and mobilize collectively. We are 
interested in understanding how these changes influence modes of regulation and 
governance, as well as methods of resistance and activism within industries in 
global production systems.
    Indeed, digitalization and data sharing can affect global production, 
transnational governance, and work in multiple and ambiguous ways. For example, 
demands (through regulation and campaigns) to increase transparency in global 
supply chains are leading to the creation of on-line tracking tools of 
materials and suppliers in global value chains. Multinational companies are 
introducing Industry 4.0 and smart factory programs to digitalize the 
production and management of their global supply chains. Branded firms are also 
increasingly tracking working hours in real-time of outsourced factories in 
distant locations. Trade unions and other civil society organizations are also 
using new communication technologies and social media in creative and strategic 
ways in their fight for better working conditions and higher environmental 
standards. Yet innovation in communication and information sharing also pose 
new threats as it opens avenues for new techniques of policing and controlling 
of workers, trade unions, and activists by the state and business alike. Such 
prospects and challenges remain underexplored and are not yet fully considered 
in our current theoretical frameworks and ideas of transnational governance, 
global value chains, labor and environmental governance, institutional theories 
of regulation, and transnational business governance interactions.
    We are interested in papers that examine empirically and theoretically 
changes in the modes of regulation and governance, and resistance and activism, 
and the opportunities and challenges they create for positive change:
•    How do new ways of communicating and information-sharing affect modes of 
governance that involve business collaboration along supply chains, the role of 
the state, and activist networks?
•    How do new forms of collaboration and techniques of information sharing 
help integrate different issues such as labor, environment, and business 
conduct in campaigns and modes of governance?
•    How are new forms of transparency requirements in global supply chains 
enacted, resisted, and create opportunities for change by business, the state, 
and other actors? How do workers, trade unions, and civil society organizations 
harness these requirements for increased transparency in new forms of advocacy?
•    In how far does Industry 4.0 and smart factories help to improve the 
outcomes of transnational governance (e.g. by better linking economic with 
social upgrading)?
•    How far do advances in digitalization and information technology create 
new possibilities for policing and control by the state and/or the private 
sector?

Abstracts for submissions to mini-conferences should be no longer than 1000 
words. The deadline for submitting proposals is February 3, 2017.
    Further information for paper or session submission:
It is possible to submit in two different categories: Individual Papers and 
Sessions.
    To submit an individual paper, you must include an abstract. Abstracts for 
submissions to mini-conferences should be no longer than 1000 words. All 
submissions need to include 3 key words.
To submit a session, you must include both an overall abstract for the session 
and abstracts for each of the 3-4 papers composing the session. The same word 
length applies to papers within sessions as does to individual paper 
submissions.
    The deadline for submitting proposals is February 3, 2017. Acceptance 
notifications will be sent by March 1, 2017. All mini-conferences require the 
submission of a full paper by June 1, 2017.
Paper submissions and session proposals must be made through our online 
submission system. For technical reasons, you must log in to the SASE website 
to access the submission system. https://sase.org/event/2017-lyon/

If you have any further questions, please do not hesitate to contact me: Nicole 
Helmerich, Hertie School of Governance, 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Please forward and distribute widely.

Best regards,
Nicole Helmerich

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"gep-ed" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to